Past pics about feed sacks...
#1
#3
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Crossville, TN
Posts: 1,078
Thanks for posting this. We raised baby chicks to layer size for a company and we always chose our dress fabric in the feed house room when it was delivered. l learned to sew using the sacks, won a prize in 4-H with a dress I had made. I don't remember printed flour sacks, just white that is what my mother used to make our under-garments.
#4
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 602
I loved this article. What truly amazes me, is the amount of flour women used to use. When you think about the amount of fabric needed to make all of those dresses etc. you're talking A LOT of flour in what was probably a rather short amount of time!!!!
#5
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Central Willamette Valley, Oregon, USA
Posts: 7,695
When you have to bake your own bread, you do use a lot of flour. I used to bake it twice a week, because my DH would not eat store bought bread after I made it the first time.
#6
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Centerville, WA
Posts: 1,254
I made everything from scratch while raising our kids. Had a son with a diet problem so couldn't feed him store bought stuff with all the additives & preservatives in them. I even made syrup & noodles. I bought my flour in the 50lb fabric flour sacks as I could go through that in a short time & can still get it at Win-Co store closest to us. I do still have a good supply of the fabric.
#7
Super Member
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 4,688
That was interesting. I was the beneficiary of dresses, hats and quilts out of feed sacks from my chicken farm grandmother. I loved all the beautiful patterns, but we never bought flour in the big bags. My other grandmother had a friend who worked in a shirt and short factory and the clothes I made myself came from the ends she brought home until she retired. That was the free fabric I got to work with. Memories.....
#8
Most of my clothes were made from feed sacks as I was growing up. The hard part was finding enough of the same pattern to make something. Grandpa worked at a feed mill and he would save some for me so Dad could get the feed when he went to town. Mom raised chickens so we always used a lot of feed (more than flour bags). Curtains, table cloths, dish towels, pillowcases, anything my Mom could sew -- on a treddle machine. This brought back so many memories. Thanks for sharing.
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